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Consider the Lobster and Other Essays

By David Foster Wallace

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Ten enthralling narrative adventures from the subversively hip, rabidly intelligent, and now, deceased David Foster Wallace ('Infinite Jest,' 'Brief Interviews with Hideous Men,' and 'A Supposedly Funny Thing I'll Never Do Again'). Whether covering the three-ring circus of a vicious presidential race, plunging into the wars between dictionary writers, or confronting the World's Largest Lobster Cooker, Wallace projects a quality of thought that is uniquely his, and a voice as potent and distinct as any in contemporary American letters. A New York Times Notable Book of the Year. 343p.

Editorial Reviews

Another savory, hard-thinking, wildly imaginative collection of essays and observations from the artful Wallace (Oblivion, 2004, etc.).Included here is the wonderful "Up, Simba" (the director's cut), a consideration of what John McCain's presidential bid reveals about "millennial politics and all its packaging and marketing," and how the "general sepsis actually makes us US voters feel." It is an essay that showcases Wallace's ability to capture the queer gamut of our citizenry, from "Talmudically bearded guys asking about Chechnya" to "the obligatory walleyed fundamentalist trying to pin [McCain] down on whether Christ really called homosexuality an abomination." In "Joseph Frank's Dostoevsky" he suggests why the Russian master is important to today's American, citing his degrees of passion, conviction and engagement with deep moral issues, as well as his great plots and splendid, alive characterizations. He gets in a mighty dig at John Updike for his uncritical celebration of self-absorption, though he may have been premature in speaking of Philip Roth's "senescence." A lobster festival becomes an opportunity to explore the subjectivity of pain and suffering (lobsters are not likely dancing a happy fandango under the clattering lid of the boiling pot). He addresses the exformative associations in Kafka, the ethics of American English usage, the state of the porn industry and gets windy tearing apart tennis champ Tracy Austin's "insipid" autobiography—but let the wind blow, for it is ever-refreshing.Should Wallace suggest an article on the behavior of a sack of hammers, the smart editor will give him a fat advance and all expenses paid. Copyright Kirkus 2005 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.

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  • 3 out of 5

    Deep Thought

    Written by QueenBoadicea, Posted on 08/24/2011 at 10:14:31 AM

    These are a series of essays about various subjects, ranging from the titular sea “bug” to the porn industry and other points in between them. While it is a rather turgid book in places, people fascinated by Mr. Wallace’s erudition and cogitation on these topics will find it a fascinating read.

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